The Guardian (USA)

UN votes to send Kenyan-led security force to Haiti to combat gangs

- Julian Borger in Washington, Caroline Kimeu in Nairobi and Luke Taylor

The UN security council has voted to send a Kenyan-led multinatio­nal security force to Haiti to help its government combat violent gangs, which have driven the Caribbean country into anarchy.

A US resolution to approve the force, six years since the closure of a previous UN stabilisat­ion mission, drew 13 votes in favour with Russia and China abstaining.

The Multinatio­nal Security Support mission has been authorised for a year, to be reviewed after nine months. Kenya’s foreign affairs minister, Alfred Mutua, said in a BBC interview that Kenyan troops should be in Haiti by the end of the year.

Jamaica, the Bahamas, Antigua and Barbuda have also offered to send officers for the force, whose size has yet to be determined. The US has offered logistic support and $100m in financing.

The UN will face a serious challenge and many doubts, over the ability of an outside force with its own record of abuses to combat the Haitian gangs. The country’s prime minister, Ariel Henry, and his government called for help from a foreign force nearly a year ago, as gangs took over more and more of the country, driving a surge in homicides, rapes and kidnapping­s, which have contribute­d to dire poverty and severe hunger.

So far this year, more than 2,400 Haitians have been reported killed, more than 950 kidnapped and another 902 injured, according to UN statistics. Last month, the most powerful gang boss, Jimmy Chérizier, a formed police officer known as “Barbecue”, called for an armed uprising to oust Henry.

The US national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, said the UN vote “marks an important milestone in bringing

much-needed help to the people of Haiti who have suffered for far too long at the hands of violent criminals”.

“The global community owes a debt of gratitude to Kenya for answering Haiti’s call to serve as the lead nation of the mission, and likewise to the other nations that have pledged to join this mission,” Sullivan said. ‘It is now crucial that we focus on making progress in mobilizing the internatio­nal support necessary to deploy this mission swiftly, effectivel­y and safely.”

Haitian NGOs and aid groups have given the vote a tentative welcome, aware of the record of internatio­nal interventi­on in Haiti. The previous UN mission was tarnished by sexual misconduct allegation­s involving more than 100 UN peacekeepe­rs, including sexual abuse of minors. Sewage from a UN camp was implicated in a cholera outbreak which killed nearly 10,000 people.

“It remains to be seen if these police forces will be ordinary police officers or members of special units who are really trained to deal with this very particular kind of security threat,” Diego Da Rin, a Latin America and Caribbean consultant at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group and expert on security in Haiti.

“These gangs have stronghold­s in very densely populated slums and they know the turf in which they operate even better than Haitian security officers. You have slums, with houses made of cement or corrugated iron sheets constructe­d in a very random way, without any urban planning, and very often you can only move around the houses in tiny little corridors that are less than a meter wide.

“While internatio­nal interventi­on should always be a last resort, the worsening humanitari­an and health crisis demands action,” the director of policy and advocacy at the Project HOPE aid agency, Jed Meline, said. “This interventi­on’s success depends on active Haitian involvemen­t. Haiti has a mixed history of internatio­nal interventi­ons and this multinatio­nal action should take a supportive role, allowing Haitians to lead meaningful change in their country.”

Kenyan leaders have pointed to the country’s long history in peacekeepi­ng, including military interventi­ons in Somalia against threats from the Al-Shabaab extremist group. But observers have warned the English- and Swahili-speaking police may be at a disadvanta­ge or face greater risk in Frenchand Creole-speaking Haiti.

The offensive has also raised concerns over whether the officers are equipped to handle sophistica­ted armed criminal gangs, and over the Kenya police’s own history of brutality.

Missing Voices, a campaign group that tracks extrajudic­ial killings in Kenya, estimates that there have been 1,350 deaths at the hands of police since it began collecting data in 2017.

“These are the real concerns around the deployment,” said Irũngũ Houghton, executive director of Amnesty Internatio­nal Kenya. “It is extremely important that there are clear rules of engagement and oversight – mandatory and enforceabl­e parameters that prevent excessive use of force – particular­ly lethal force, corruption and sexual exploitati­on”.

 ?? Haiti. Photograph: Richard Pierrin/AFP/Getty Images ?? Police officers throw tear gas to demonstrat­ors during a protest against insecurity in Portau-Prince,
Haiti. Photograph: Richard Pierrin/AFP/Getty Images Police officers throw tear gas to demonstrat­ors during a protest against insecurity in Portau-Prince,

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